As we
watched through the second set of the classic hit TV spy series Callan, lead star Edward Woodward passed
away.One of the greatest actors in
British entertainment history, his career was amazing and his performances very
rich and consistent for over half a century.It was with some irony that I watched the final of four seasons of the
series, issued by Acorn here as Callan 
Set Two, the second and final of the color seasons.If you missed Callan  Set One, here is our coverage to explain the show better:

This
time, David Callan may start running the S.I.S. department he has killed so
many people over, but first must get himself out of his latest mess.The hour-long episodes this time include:

1)Thatll Be The Day

2)Call Me Sir!

3)First Refusal

4)Rules Of The Game

5)If He Can, So Could I

6)None Of Your Business

7)Charlie Says Its Goodbye

8)I Never Wanted The Job

9)The Carrier

10)The Contract

11)THE RICHMOND FILE: Call Me Enemy

12)THE RICHMOND FILE: Do You Recognise The Woman?

13)THE RICHMOND FILE: A Man Like Me

The final
three shows add up to what turned out to be the peak end of the show before it
was surprisingly cancelled.It helps to
see the previous season(s), but if you can follow the show and its complex
nature, you will still be impressed.It
is still a Cold War show, yet its dark truths about the business of espionage
are as true as they ever were and only The
Sandbaggers (reviewed elsewhere on this site) was ever its equal.Yes, it is a precursor to The Equalizer (which we have also
covered on the site) but this is much darker and amazing.Callan
is an all-time television classic.

The 1.33
X 1 image is once again one of those many classic British series where the
interiors are shot on PAL videotape and locations (plus most outdoor shots) are
shot on 16mm film, though you are seeing film-to-tape transfers of the
time.The film may sadly be lost, so so
much for a semi-HD version, but the quality here is pretty good despite some
aliasing and flaws here and there.The
Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono is consistent and at a healthy volume throughout.Extras include audio commentary tracks on
episodes #5 and # 11 with Woodward himself that should only be heard after
watching the rest of the series.A
feature film was made after this in 1974 and we hope to see that on Blu-ray and
DVD soon.In the meantime, if you have
never seen Callan, catch it ASAP!